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Visa amnesty for immigrants

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  • Registered Users Posts: 12,811 ✭✭✭✭billy the squid


    Like Mosney, but they wouldn't be allowed to leave, unless to leave the country - whereupon the Gardai would escort them to their plane.

    Allowing asylum-seekers to move freely through this country allows potentially illegal-immigrants to escape deportation and this is unacceptable.

    like auswitz so...:rolleyes:
    I'll thank you to stop making out that anyone who disagrees with you is a Nazi.

    branding minorities as harmful to the country and locking them up in "camps" is what the nazis did, so if it barks like a dog, lifts its leg like a dog, chances are its a dog.
    I'm not the bigoted one!

    yes you are. you want to ban muslims from entering this country because the risk of terrorist attack, yet you neglect to mention terrorists of christian faith who were born in this country.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,406 ✭✭✭arcadegame2004


    Please, without ignoring the actual question, explain what exactly is wrong with our system or the system that we are required to have in place under UN law? Asylum seekers cannot work. They cannot claim welfare benenifit. They are not given money to decide their own food or their own accomondation. As you said most are eventually deported. How exactly is this system not working as it is.

    In not one single year have a significant number of bogus asylum claimants been deported. Read the following from the Irish Refugee Council website:

    http://www.irishrefugeecouncil.ie/
    [1] Since 1999, a total of 2004 persons have been deported from the State, 590 of them last year.
    2,299 people were voluntarily repatriated in the period 1999 – 16th July this year.
    Over 4,500 people were refused leave to land in Ireland in 2003.
    Last year 1,174 people were recognised as refugees while 83 were given ‘leave to remain’."

    So out of 60,000 asylum seekers, 59,000 are not recognised as refugees. And out of that how many have been deported or were voluntarily repatriated? 4,302! That is NOT most of the illegal immigrants!

    The lawyers are having a field-day with all the mechanisms and loopholes in our laws allowing the asylum-seekers to drag the process out and out and out so that then they get to stay for years, put down roots, and before you know it the Left are carping on about how "we can't deport them now, they have friends family here, how 'heartless' it would be to deport them!" :rolleyes: .

    The problem with the current system is that it allows people from safe countries to apply for asylum, thus making the backlog even worse. You are not a refugee if you come from a safe country. To me, refugee has connotations to "seeking refuge" from something. I refuse utterly to accept that coming from a poor country alone gives you to right to call yourself a refugee, and force your way into someone elses country and get automatic citizenship or residency. Poverty alone does not a refugee make.

    If people want to come here for economic reasons then let them go through legal channels, including applying for work-permits. An Australian-style points system is needed to match workers to specific job-types that they have skills in, with the points being awarded only for job-types for industries experiencing skills-shortages. That way, we tailor our immigration policy to the needs of the Irish economy, and prevent Irish people losing their jobs to competition from cheap labour. The British Government has announced plans to introduce this kind of policy, so if what I am proposing is extreme, then so are they. Can't have it both ways. :p

    The Citizenship referendum was, in my opinion, a positive step in removing the tricks and loopholes that reward illegal immigration, turning babies into passports. But more must be done.

    We need a Irish or EU list of safe-countries, from which immigrants would automatically be denied the right to apply for asylum, on the grounds that their countries are safe. This list would include countries such as Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania and Nigeria, as well as the EEA, Latin America, and all countries tha tare judged safe, with the criteria for "safety" being "freedom from repression, famine, and war". Citizens of countries meeting this criteria should be denied the right to claim asylum. If that violates the UN Refugee Convention, then it should be renegotiated. If the other countries refuse to renegotiate it, then Ireland should withdraw from the UN Refugee Convention. It is a Cold War document, written for an age when NATO and the Warsaw Pact countries were looking for a formalised mechanism for regularising defections to each other.
    like auswitz so...

    No not bloody like Auschwitz! I am talking about detaining them in humane conditions, not starving them, shooting them, burning them, forcing them into slave labour, or torturing them! Labelling people again you are.


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,811 ✭✭✭✭billy the squid


    No not bloody like Auschwitz! I am talking about detaining them in humane conditions, not starving them, shooting them, burning them, forcing them into slave labour, or torturing them! Labelling people again you are.

    guantanimo bay then?

    what you propose is a concentration camp plain and simple. what else could it be?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15,552 ✭✭✭✭GuanYin


    Ok I'm fed up with this.

    Arcade, I know you said you believe the last time.

    But provide evidence that Ireland as a whole is against this as you said or with draw.

    You have no right or position to speak for the irsh people or propose your biggoted opinons as that of a nation.

    Provide hard core facts or withdraw.
    Mods, I urge you to support this.

    I don't believe this forum showuld be a platform for such false proclamations.


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,299 ✭✭✭✭MadsL


    Illegal immigrants have committed a crime and a crime should not be rewarded.

    How many Irish illegal immigrants should we now expect to be deported from the US then? The entire 100,000 Irish that have gone over in the last seven
    years on tourist visas and stayed after the time was up? Where should they serve their prison sentence? In the US or here?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 17,213 ✭✭✭✭therecklessone



    So out of 60,000 asylum seekers, 59,000 are not recognised as refugees. And out of that how many have been deported or were voluntarily repatriated? 4,302! That is NOT most of the illegal immigrants!

    Pulled from you ar*e. Again.

    From your own source Asylum-Seeker and Refugee Statistics for Ireland in 2004
    Persons who apply for asylum in Ireland are entitled to have their case heard at the ‘first instance’ by the Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner (ORAC) and if unsuccesful, at appeal by the Refugee Appeals Tribunal (RAT)
    Cumulative statistics:

    Since the implementation of the Refugee Act 1996 (as amended) in November 2000, the ORAC has processed a total of 43,114 asylum applications at first instance while the RAT has processed to completion 24,127 cases, up to the end of 2004. (All cases processed at appeal are included in both sets of figures above.)

    The overall total of asylum applicants recognised as refugees from 2000 up to 2004 is 5,845* (2,337 at first instance and 3,508 at appeals).

    By my reckoning thats roughly 13% of applications were successful from 2000-2004. Do the maths.
    *1,533 individuals were recognised as refugees between 1996 and 2000 before the ORAC and RAT were set up, bringing the overall total to 7,285

    I don't have figures for 1996-1999, but I'm sure a thoroughly prepared researcher like yourself can provide said figures. Either way your original figures (like everything else you bring to the discussion) are way off.
    Leave to remain:

    Persons who have been definitively refused refugee status are entitled to apply to the Minister of Justice, Equality and Law Reform for ‘leave to remain’. In deciding whether to grant permission to remain in Ireland, the Minister for Justice is obliged to consider 11 grounds as set out in Section 3 of the Immigration Act 1999, which include the age of the applicant, duration of residence in State, character and conduct of applicant both within and humanitarian considerations amongst others. In 2004, only 75 individuals were granted leave to remain on humanitarian grounds, bringing the total since 1999 to 442.
    In not one single year have a significant number of bogus asylum claimants been deported.
    Deportations:

    A total of 599 deportations were carried out in 2004 from 2,866 deportation orders signed by the Minister of Justice.
    <snip>
    Since 1999, a total of 2,268 deportations have been carried out.

    Another 611 left the state voluntarily, bringing the total that have left the state (and informed the authorities) to 2,520 since 1999.

    230 Dublin II transfer orders were signed and 65 were carried out. Under the Dublin II Regulation, Ireland may request another state to accept responsibility for an asylum application and have it processed in that state, if the applicant had previously applied for asylum in that member state or was granted a visa or work permit in member state. Similarly, Ireland receives requests from other states for the transfer of asylum applicants here.

    Now I don't know the ins and outs of immigration legislation, but I'd have imagined that:
    1. A deportation order is required for the deportation of a non-national
    2. Failure to carry out a deportation on receipt of such an order indicates a failing on the part of the immigration authorities/Gardai

    Easy enough to resolve.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,731 ✭✭✭pete


    blah blah We need a Irish or EU list of safe-countries, from which immigrants would automatically be denied the right to apply for asylum, on the grounds that their countries are safe. This list would include countries such as Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania and Nigeria, as well as the EEA, Latin America, and all countries tha tare judged safe, with the criteria for "safety" being "freedom from repression, famine, and war".

    http://www.google.com/search?q=define%3A+refugee

    http://hrw.org/doc?t=europe&c=ukrain
    This Sunday’s inauguration of Viktor Yushchenko as president marks an important opportunity to break with past shortcomings in respect for human rights in Ukraine, Human Rights Watch said today in an open letter to the president-elect.

    http://hrw.org/doc?t=europe&c=romani
    Today in Romania, gays and lesbians are routinely denied some of the most basic human rights guaranteed by international law. Despite amendments in 1996 to the criminal code provisions relating to homosexual conduct, gays and lesbians continue to be arrested and convicted for such relations if they become public knowledge.

    http://hrw.org/doc?t=europe&c=bulgar
    Children in Bulgaria are often deprived of their basic rights by police, the very people who are supposed to protect them. After conducting a fact-finding mission to Bulgaria in the spring of 1996, Human Rights Watch concludes that street children are often subjected to physical abuse and other mistreatment by police, both on the street and in police lockups, and by skinhead gangs, who brutally attack the children because of their Roma (Gypsy) ethnic identity. Once detained by police, children fall victim to gross procedural inadequacies in the juvenile justice system in Bulgaria.

    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=africa&c=nigeri
    This 111-page report documents human rights violations since Shari’a was introduced to cover criminal law in 12 northern states. Since 2000, at least 10 people have been sentenced to death and dozens sentenced to amputation and floggings. The majority have been tried without legal representation. Many sentenced to amputation were convicted on confessions extracted under torture by the police. Judges in Shari’a courts, most of whom have not received adequate training, have failed to inform defendants of their rights.

    Yeah they sure sound 100% safe to me.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,213 ✭✭✭✭therecklessone


    MadsL wrote:
    How many Irish illegal immigrants should we now expect to be deported from the US then? The entire 100,000 Irish that have gone over in the last seven
    years on tourist visas and stayed after the time was up? Where should they serve their prison sentence? In the US or here?

    I've been trying to get an answer to that off him for ages now... :rolleyes:
    As far as I am concerned, you are not a genuine refugee for the purposes of the asylum and immigration system, unless you claim asylum in the first EU state you enter, and/or are fleeing war, famine or persecution.

    Given that Irish immigrants to the US were fleeing neither war, famine nor persecution post-War of Independance, can I take it you support my contention that every illegal Irish immigrant in the US today should be deported forthwith? I suggest we place them in detention centres (humane of course) until we can find seats on eastbound transatlantic flights. We'll need to shackle them while they are in transit to/from the detention centre, for their safety as much as for the safety of legal citizens of the US. The filthy criminals that they are...


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,299 ✭✭✭✭MadsL


    MadsL wrote:
    How many Irish illegal immigrants should we now expect to be deported from the US then? The entire 100,000 Irish that have gone over in the last seven
    years on tourist visas and stayed after the time was up? Where should they serve their prison sentence? In the US or here?

    To answer my own question, and following Arcade's recommendations regarding the AQ 'threat'; it is best that all illegal Irish in the US be rounded up and interred in dentention camps until they either leave or are recognised as genuine refugees. After all it is well known that Irish nationals have been operating as terrorist cells, raising money for terrorist organisations and most recently plotting dasterdly deeds in Columbia. One can't be too careful - after all they may launch a terrorist strike against the US. Any illegal Brits should also be rounded up in case they attempt to overthrow the Government as they have tried this before.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,213 ✭✭✭✭therecklessone


    pete wrote:

    The delicious irony of Pete providing all those URLs from Human Rights Watch to aman who has a link to HRW in his sig is not lost on this board... :D


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  • Registered Users Posts: 12,811 ✭✭✭✭billy the squid


    OK i'll bite seeing as arcadegame2004 seems to think that these assylum seekers are safe in their own countries. even though it is not the topic of this thread but he's the one that brought it up so here goes

    lets have a look at the top ten countries on the Irish Refugee counsils website
    Somalia – 82

    http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-02-07-voa26.cfm
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/country_profiles/1072592.stm
    Iraq – 34

    http://www.iraqbodycount.net/

    Do you still think iraq is safe?
    Sudan – 34

    http://allafrica.com/stories/200502070758.html
    China – 23

    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=asia&c=china
    Iran – 20

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/06/opinion/edhunt.html
    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=mideast&c=iran
    Zimbabwe – 18

    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=africa&c=zimbab
    Nigeria – 18

    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=africa&c=nigeri
    Afghanistan – 16

    http://www.afgha.com/?af=article&sid=47666

    They are still fighting in afghanistan you know, just because you dont see it on the news and all
    Ukraine – 14

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1341141,00.html

    fiddling elections in Ukraine

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2004-12-14-ukraine_x.htm

    where the only way to win an election is to poison the opposition leader.
    Russia – 14

    http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/russia/chechnya/
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/pp020505.shtml

    not the safest country either.

    now what was that you were saying about these assylum seekers not being safe in their own countries?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,254 ✭✭✭chewy


    aha just remembered taht even US nationals are offically seeking asylum in Canada to avoid being sent back to Iraq, so you can even be a asylum seeker from the "safest" country in the world!!!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,406 ✭✭✭arcadegame2004


    OK i'll bite seeing as arcadegame2004 seems to think that these assylum seekers are safe in their own countries. even though it is not the topic of this thread but he's the one that brought it up so here goes

    lets have a look at the top ten countries on the Irish Refugee counsils website



    http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-02-07-voa26.cfm
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/country_profiles/1072592.stm



    http://www.iraqbodycount.net/

    Do you still think iraq is safe?



    http://allafrica.com/stories/200502070758.html



    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=asia&c=china



    http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/06/opinion/edhunt.html
    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=mideast&c=iran



    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=africa&c=zimbab



    http://hrw.org/doc/?t=africa&c=nigeri



    http://www.afgha.com/?af=article&sid=47666

    They are still fighting in afghanistan you know, just because you dont see it on the news and all



    http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1341141,00.html

    fiddling elections in Ukraine

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2004-12-14-ukraine_x.htm

    where the only way to win an election is to poison the opposition leader.



    http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/russia/chechnya/
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/pp020505.shtml

    not the safest country either.

    now what was that you were saying about these assylum seekers not being safe in their own countries?


    Okay, but is anyone here seriously suggesting that Ireland is the first EU state any of these asylum-seekers enter? If not then they are not our problem, but the responsibility of the first EU state they entered, under the Dublin II Convention. Regarding Ukraine, it is now a democracy. Regarding all the other countries mentioned, it strains credulity to argue that Ireland is the first EU state they entered upon leaving their country. Regarding Nigeria, Sharia law only applies in the northern states. To escape Sharia, they need only travel to the Christian south of the country, or a neighbouring country.

    There are many tragic cases of human rights abuses around the world. But it is simply not on to say that Ireland should stand out, with Spain, among European nations as the only ones granting carte-blanche amnesty to asylum-seekers. The person who started this thread asked should we grant the same to asylum-seekers in Ireland. However, asylum-seekers here are not allowed to work, so I felt (perhaps mistakenly) that the starter of this thread and others were calling for carte-blanche amnesty for all asylum-seekers, as is Labour party policy (or was in the 2002 election and look what good it did them). We need to implement the goal of EU treaties which called for a common EU Immigration and Asylum Policy, so that the asylum and immigration system is used for genuine refugees, rather than as a system enabling people to root around for the most generous system, by traversing the continent.

    Billy the Squid, what evidence have you that the majority of asylum-seekers from these countries in Ireland fall into the category of those who were made victims from the human-rights abuses you refer to? The fact that Sharia law applies in Northern Nigeria makes us none the wiser about whether or not Nigerian asylum seekers in Ireland come from the North. if they don't then the Sharia issue is irrelevant.

    In any case, Ireland is too small to allow itself to become the primary destination of the world's wronged. We only have 4 million people (of which hundreds of thousands aren't even of Irish parentage or origin) and many feel that we have taken in enough. Britain, - a country of 60 million people - is far better placed to take in the migrants converging on Europe's shores every year. We have only had our independent state for 70 years and we want to keep it, not turn it into a province of Nigeria. Partition has its routes in mass-migration remember. If our hospitals are being overburdened now, how can they possibly cope if we introduce the pull-factor of mass amnesty? Mass amnesty would mark Ireland out as a soft touch. How much proof do you need of that?

    Oh and whoever said I am talking about "Concentration camps" is departing the realms of factual argument, and entering the realms of hysteria in my opinion. Can we please keep this debate civil, and avoid personal insults. There is a HELL of a lot of difference between wanting a tougher immigration policy on the one hand, and wanting to exterminate people on the other!


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,299 ✭✭✭✭MadsL


    Perhaps you should actually read the Dublin2 Convention...!!!!!

    http://www.refugeelawreader.org/files/pdf/549.pdf

    A few quotes;

    Article 7
    Where the asylum seeker has a family member, regardless of
    whether the family was previously formed in the country of
    origin, who has been allowed to reside as a refugee in a
    Member State, that Member State shall be responsible for examining
    the application for asylum, provided that the persons
    concerned so desire.

    Article 8
    If the asylum seeker has a family member in a Member State
    whose application has not yet been the subject of a first decision
    regarding the substance, that Member State shall be
    responsible for examining the application for asylum, provided
    that the persons concerned so desire.

    Where the asylumseeker is in possession of a valid visa,
    the Member State which issued the visa shall be responsible for
    examining the application for asylum, unless the visa was
    issued when acting for or on the written authorisation of
    another Member State. In such a case, the latter Member State
    shall be responsible for examining the application for asylum.

    Article 10
    Where it is established, on the basis of proof or circumstantial
    evidence as described in the two lists mentioned in
    Article 18(3), including the data referred to in Chapter III of
    Regulation (EC) No 2725/2000, that an asylumseeker has irregularly
    crossed the border into a Member State by land, sea or
    air having come from a third country,
    the Member State thus
    entered shall be responsible for examining the application for
    asylum. This responsibility shall cease 12 months after the date
    on which the irregular border crossing took place.


    whoever said I am talking about "Concentration camps" is departing the realms of factual argument, and entering the realms of hysteria in my opinion.

    You would know all about hysteria I guess. By the way, did I get you views on illegal irish immigrants correct?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 25,848 ✭✭✭✭Zombrex


    There are many tragic cases of human rights abuses around the world. But it is simply not on to say that Ireland should stand out, with Spain, among European nations as the only ones granting carte-blanche amnesty to asylum-seekers.

    Why not? It will save us money, which I though was the entire rational behind your arguments against asylum seekers
    So that the asylum and immigration system is used for genuine refugees, rather than as a system enabling people to root around for the most generous system, by traversing the continent.

    And by your logic anyone applying for asylum in Ireland is atomatically denied asylum because they are applying in Ireland. I am sure the rest of europe would just love that policy :rolleyes:
    In any case, Ireland is too small to allow itself to become the primary destination of the world's wronged. We only have 4 million people (of which hundreds of thousands aren't even of Irish parentage or origin) and many feel that we have taken in enough. Britain, - a country of 60 million people - is far better placed to take in the migrants converging on Europe's shores every year. We have only had our independent state for 70 years and we want to keep it, not turn it into a province of Nigeria.

    Such bulls**t it is hard to keep up (your previous post contained a whole load of wrong statistics from a page YOU linked too! I will post the correct statistics tomorrow if I could be bothered. You have been shown the correct statistics before and you just ignored them)

    Firstly Ireland takes less that 1 percent of the total number of refugees in the world. We take less than the Czech Republic and Slovakia FFS.

    Secondly Ireland has one of the lowest unemployment levels in the world and one of the fastest growing economys. Not that this matters much because refugees can't work!!

    Thirdly you just show yourself up for being the racist bigot everyone on this thread thinks you are when you come up with such ridiculous scaremongering statements such as your last line.


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,811 ✭✭✭✭billy the squid


    Billy the Squid, what evidence have you that the majority of asylum-seekers from these countries in Ireland fall into the category of those who were made victims from the human-rights abuses you refer to? The fact that Sharia law applies in Northern Nigeria makes us none the wiser about whether or not Nigerian asylum seekers in Ireland come from the North. if they don't then the Sharia issue is irrelevant.

    the fact that they are here and not there is proof enough for me. If they were happy in their own country and felt safe in their own country then why did they leave and request assylum.

    assylum seekers cannot work remember.
    In any case, Ireland is too small to allow itself to become the primary destination of the world's wronged. We only have 4 million people (of which hundreds of thousands aren't even of Irish parentage or origin)

    wait a minute. the figures from each country dont even break into tripple digits. where are yo ugetting the 100s of thousands figure from.

    as well as that have you not considered the fact that there are wives and husbands of irish people who have not been born here. what percentage of this magical figure of hundreds of thousands do those people make up.


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,811 ✭✭✭✭billy the squid


    Oh and whoever said I am talking about "Concentration camps" is departing the realms of factual argument, and entering the realms of hysteria in my opinion. Can we please keep this debate civil, and avoid personal insults. There is a HELL of a lot of difference between wanting a tougher immigration policy on the one hand, and wanting to exterminate people on the other!
    oh really?

    concentration camp
    Encyclopædia Britannica Article

    Page 1 of 1

    Print PagePrint ArticleE-mail ArticleCite Article

    internment centre for political prisoners and members of national or minority groups who are confined for reasons of state security, exploitation, or punishment, usually by executive decree or military order. Persons are placed in such camps often on the basis of identification with a particular ethnic or political group rather than as individuals


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,608 ✭✭✭✭sceptre


    Okay, but is anyone here seriously suggesting that Ireland is the first EU state any of these asylum-seekers enter? If not then they are not our problem, but the responsibility of the first EU state they entered, under the Dublin II Convention.
    <not really mod mode>
    Kindly refrain from talking about things you don't understand. I took time out a few months back to explain the Dublin II Regulations (it's Regulations, not Convention by the way) and you obviously forgot how to read that week as you still don't understand either its purpose or its scope. Put bluntly, you haven't a fricking clue of what you're on about now. It's tragic but you're talking through your arse. And everyone except you knows it.
    </not really mod mode>

    <really mod mode>
    On the other hand, assuming you can actually read, you're attempting to mislead despite people having kindly explained the particular law to you repeatedly (more than once and pretty explicitly at that) and hence you're indulging in what we call a lie. I know for a fact that you've been warned on several occasions about this and the whole opinion as facts thing, very recently in fact so this is your final possible pre-ban warning. Do it again and I will ban you from the forum. I don't care what anyone's politics are and I don't care whether I agree with their views or not (in fact I've always been of the opinion that ideally anyone should be able to discuss their views here as long as they can present them) but I can't and won't have this turned into a playground for children. The older kids (especially the ones who can read facts and re-present them as what they actually are after having them explained) want their views heard too. Final warning, this is not a drill.

    You may discuss this warning with me or with the other mods by PM or you may discuss it in the feedback forum, though the meaning and reason should be pretty plain. You may not discuss it in this thread. Feel free to discuss (by either of the offered methods) the bluntness of my message above. I'll happily discuss it in public. Obviously you can continue to discuss the Regulations in this thread, as it's relevant, though with my ordinary user hat on I'd suggest you read the opening paragraphs for knowledge about optional enforcability first.
    </really mod mode>


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 16,659 ✭✭✭✭dahamsta


    <muted applause for sceptre>


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭gurramok


    MadsL wrote:
    How many Irish illegal immigrants should we now expect to be deported from the US then? The entire 100,000 Irish that have gone over in the last seven
    years on tourist visas and stayed after the time was up? Where should they serve their prison sentence? In the US or here?

    Them all as they abuse another countries system. Server their sentence there as they have real prisions hehe.
    Its wishful thinking as it will never happen as there are close ties between this country and the US.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15,552 ✭✭✭✭GuanYin


    gurramok wrote:
    Them all as they abuse another countries system. Server their sentence there as they have real prisions hehe.
    Its wishful thinking as it will never happen as there are close ties between this country and the US.

    I'm quite sure I disagree, with this. I can hardly tell because your grasp of english seems to be non-existant, but thankfully the intellectual content of your post matches this perfectly.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭gurramok


    syke wrote:
    I'm quite sure I disagree, with this. I can hardly tell because your grasp of english seems to be non-existant, but thankfully the intellectual content of your post matches this perfectly.

    Probably 2 spelling mistakes and is your post a personal insult ?
    Your post is not exactly perfect written but is well understood.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15,552 ✭✭✭✭GuanYin


    gurramok wrote:
    Probably 2 spelling mistakes and is your post a personal insult ?
    Your post is not exactly perfect written but is well understood.

    Ok, firstly there was no personal insult.

    I couldnt understand your post and it took me maybe 3-4 reads to figure out what you meant.

    When I finally did I saw THE POST was little more than a quip and not a contribution. I never insulted you at all.

    The US are cracking down hard on illegal aliens, but they recognise two that the country was, in no small way, built on it, like us they exploit cheap labour in the service and undesireable job sectors.

    I don't see the point in jailing an illegal alien in the country they are illegally in, as you are putting a far greater strain on the system financially then if they were working.

    So, I said your post wasn't a very intelligent one. That says nothing about you, except that you authored.

    So whats the problem?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭gurramok


    I'm glad you clarify what you had meant.

    In regard to my post, it was indeed a quip but when you think about it, the US imho tends to deport certain types of illegals than others.
    If not imprison them, deport them. They broke the law, abused the visa regulations and should be punished. As they are Irish citizens, it gives them no right to abuse the system of another country.
    If 100,000 Irish illegals were deported back, it would do wonders for the economy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15,552 ✭✭✭✭GuanYin


    gurramok wrote:
    I'm glad you clarify what you had meant.

    In regard to my post, it was indeed a quip but when you think about it, the US imho tends to deport certain types of illegals than others.
    If not imprison them, deport them. They broke the law, abused the visa regulations and should be punished. As they are Irish citizens, it gives them no right to abuse the system of another country.
    If 100,000 Irish illegals were deported back, it would do wonders for the economy.

    Really? If they were deported back for being an illegal resident wouldn't that constitute a criminal record which woul dlimittheir job prospects. It would also mean they would be rule dout of jobs with US companies or positions that involve travel.

    So an unhappy dissident workforce is a good workforce?


    I thnk the soundings from the US now, is to allow those of benefit easier access (although through tighter regulation) and kick everyone else out, no matter where they are from.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭gurramok


    I'd doubt that they would be convicted of anything as the govts would probably make a deal to keep their records clean. If they do get deported with a conviction, there's plenty of work for 'em here as taxi drivers :)
    Anyway, my view is that they made the choice to violate US law by overstaying and hence should be deported if the authorities over there do anything about it.
    There were lotteries here for people to go to the US legally, the option was there for the illegals and they ignored it.

    What you mean 'those of benefit easier access', who are these people ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,299 ✭✭✭✭MadsL


    People, you are kinda missing the point of my 'modest proposal' about the US Irish illegals. I was pointing out that Arcade would probably not support the kind of measures he was proposing for inmigrants to Ireland for Irish illegal immigrants in the US.

    However this may become a live issue - despite Irish efforts to haul the US ambassador before a Dail committee (Ambassadors don't 'do' public meetings, a point of diplomatic protocol seemingly lost on Bertie - but please don't hijack this thread down this avenue. Start a new thread if need be.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,213 ✭✭✭✭therecklessone


    Wicknight wrote:



    Such bulls**t it is hard to keep up (your previous post contained a whole load of wrong statistics from a page YOU linked too! I will post the correct statistics tomorrow if I could be bothered. You have been shown the correct statistics before and you just ignored them)

    Already done I'm afraid, and he's ignored them as I suspected he would.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,213 ✭✭✭✭therecklessone



    There are many tragic cases of human rights abuses around the world. But it is simply not on to say that Ireland should stand out, with Spain, among European nations as the only ones granting carte-blanche amnesty to asylum-seekers. The person who started this thread asked should we grant the same to asylum-seekers in Ireland. However, asylum-seekers here are not allowed to work, so I felt (perhaps mistakenly) that the starter of this thread and others were calling for carte-blanche amnesty for all asylum-seekers, as is Labour party policy (or was in the 2002 election and look what good it did them).

    A blatant lie.

    The thread is titled "Visa amnesty for immigrants"

    The original poster quoted the following:
    Dub13 wrote:
    Spain opens visa amnesty for immigrants
    07/02/2005 - 12:42:44

    Illegal immigrants lined up at their consulates seeking documents to help them qualify to live and work in Spain under a three-month amnesty that began today.

    The Socialist government projects about 800,000 illegal immigrants will apply by May 7. The goal is to reduce worker exploitation and tax evasion.

    Under five previous amnesties during the past 15 years, about two million people – mostly from Latin America, north Africa and eastern Europe – who had arrived in Spain without proper documentation were legalised.

    To qualify for amnesty, employers must provide evidence that applicants have a job, while applicants must document they have no criminal record in their home country and have lived in Spain since before last August.

    When the three-month period ends, employers who hire illegal immigrants are subject to fines reaching.

    There is no mention of asylum seekers in that, the thread title, nor the question posted by Dub13 in his first post. The original post can be read here in its entirity. I suggest you peruse it before you continue.

    You're arguments on this topic are a fraud.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 17,213 ✭✭✭✭therecklessone



    Billy the Squid, what evidence have you that the majority of asylum-seekers from these countries in Ireland fall into the category of those who were made victims from the human-rights abuses you refer to? The fact that Sharia law applies in Northern Nigeria makes us none the wiser about whether or not Nigerian asylum seekers in Ireland come from the North. if they don't then the Sharia issue is irrelevant.

    And so when they apply for asylum in this country we investigate their claim, and either grant it or refuse. Simple really.

    Oh and whoever said I am talking about "Concentration camps" is departing the realms of factual argument, and entering the realms of hysteria in my opinion.

    Pot=kettle=black ar*e.


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